Resting Metabolic Rate Calculator

Five peer-reviewed equations, macro splits, formula working — all in your browser.

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Your resting metabolic rate is the engine number under the bonnet of your metabolism — the calories your body burns around the clock even when you are doing nothing at all. This calculator runs five peer-reviewed equations side by side, shows you the full arithmetic, and converts the result into practical calorie targets and gram-level macros for any goal. Everything computes privately in your browser.

How it works

Step 1 — Choose a formula. The tool supports five equations covering six decades of nutrition science:

FormulaYearInputsBest for
Mifflin–St Jeor1990weight, height, age, sexDefault — lowest error in healthy adults
Harris–Benedict Revised1984weight, height, age, sexSlightly better for older adults
Katch–McArdle1996lean body massAthletes, high/low body-fat outliers
Owen1986/1987weight, sexSimple weight-only estimate
Cunningham1980lean body massSports science / athletic populations

Step 2 — Multiply by an activity factor to reach your TDEE (total daily energy expenditure):

TDEE = RMR × activity factor

Activity factors range from 1.2 (desk job, no exercise) to 2.2 (elite twice-daily training).

Step 3 — Apply a calorie target. Subtract 500 kcal/day from TDEE for steady fat loss (~0.5 kg/week), add 250 kcal for a lean gain (~0.25 kg/week), or stay at TDEE to maintain. One kilogram of body fat holds approximately 7,700 kcal.

The Mifflin–St Jeor equation (default)

Published in the Journal of the American Dietetic Association in 1990 and validated against indirect calorimetry on more than 250 subjects, Mifflin–St Jeor is the most cited predictive equation in clinical nutrition:

  • Men: RMR = 10 × W(kg) + 6.25 × H(cm) − 5 × A + 5
  • Women: RMR = 10 × W(kg) + 6.25 × H(cm) − 5 × A − 161

The only difference between sexes is the constant (+5 vs −161), reflecting average differences in fat-free mass distribution. The mean prediction error across validation studies is roughly ±8%, which translates to about ±150 kcal for a 1,800 kcal RMR.

The Katch–McArdle equation (lean mass)

When you supply a body fat percentage the calculator can use:

RMR = 370 + 21.6 × LBM (kg)

where LBM = total body weight × (1 − body fat fraction). Because lean mass is the metabolically active tissue, this single-variable formula outperforms weight-based equations for anyone who deviates significantly from average body composition — athletes, strength trainers, and people carrying substantial excess fat. A DEXA scan or calibrated skinfold measurement gives the most accurate body fat input; circumference-based estimates are a reasonable approximation.

Worked example

A 32-year-old woman, 65 kg, 168 cm, 24% body fat, moderately active:

Mifflin–St Jeor:

RMR = 10 × 65 + 6.25 × 168 − 5 × 32 − 161
    = 650 + 1,050 − 160 − 161
    = 1,379 kcal/day
TDEE = 1,379 × 1.55 = 2,137 kcal/day

Katch–McArdle:

LBM  = 65 × (1 − 0.24) = 49.4 kg
RMR  = 370 + 21.6 × 49.4 = 1,437 kcal/day
TDEE = 1,437 × 1.55 = 2,227 kcal/day

The lean-mass formula gives a higher RMR because the woman’s muscle-to-fat ratio is above the population average assumed by Mifflin–St Jeor for that weight. For a high-body-fat individual the relationship reverses.

GoalDaily caloriesWeekly change
Steady fat loss1,637−0.46 kg
Maintain2,1370
Lean gain2,387+0.23 kg

Why RMR matters for fat loss

Most diet calculators show you a calorie number without revealing how it was derived. Understanding that your RMR is the foundation — and that it accounts for up to 75% of the calories you burn — reframes common mistakes. Severe restriction (e.g., 800 kcal/day) eats into the RMR cushion, triggers adaptive thermogenesis (metabolic slowdown of 5–15%), and accelerates lean mass loss. A moderate 15–20% deficit below TDEE preserves muscle, keeps hormonal signals intact, and produces fat loss that is maintained after the diet ends. The goal table in this calculator flags any target below the established safe minima (1,200 kcal for women, 1,500 for men) with a warning symbol.

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